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ANGELINE 

GEORGE H. CALVERT 



LEE AND SHEPARD 



ANGELINE. 



GEORGE H. CALVERT'S BOOKS. 



THE NATION'S BIRTH, and Other National Poems $i.oo 

ARNOLD AND ANDRE. An Historical Play 1.50 

ESSAYS y€STHETICAL........ 1.50 

BRIEF ESSAYS AND BREVITIES 1.50 

SOME OF THE THOUGHTS OF JOSEPH JOUBERT. 

With a Biographical Notice . . » • 1.50 

FIRST YEARS IN EUROPE . .0.. 1.50 

LIFE AND WORKS OF GOETHE. AnEssay 1.50 

THE MAID OF ORLEANS. An Historical Tragedy.... 1.50 

THE LIFE OF RUBENS 1.50 

CHARLOTTE VON STEIN 1.50 

WORDSWORTH 1.50 

SHAKESPEARE. A Study 1.30 

COLERIDGE, SHELLEY, GOETHE 1.50 

LIFE, DEATH, AND OTHER POEMS i.oo 

MIRABEAU. An Historical Drama i.oo 

LEE AND SHEPARD, Publishers, Boston, Mass. 



ANGELINE. 



ANGELIISrE. 

A POEM, 
GEOEGE H.'^ALVEET. 





BOSTON: 
LEE AND SHEPARD, PUBLISHEES. 

NEW YORK: 
CHARLES T. DILLINGHAM. 






CopyrigTit, 1883, 
By GEOUGE H. CALVERT. 



The Riverside Press, Cambridge: 
Electrotyped and Printed by H. 0. Houghton & Co. 



ANGELINE. 



'T WAS not an old-faced castle^ with a moat, 
Drawbridge, and court portcullised, turreted, 
With look defiant still, as though its throat 
Would like to blow of feudal war a dread 
Awakening blast, to summon from their bed 
Knight and retainer, battle-axe and shield 
Snatched hastily, with heavy falchion, red 
With neighbor's blood, who fell, not in the field 
But treacherously slain, unarmed and unaneled. 



ANGELINE. 



II. 



Imagination^ roused by that fierce blast, 
Scales joyously the castle's lofty wall, 
To scan rude trappings of a distant past 
And pace the flags of hospitable hall, 
And penetrate unhindered into all 
Chambers, even to where beauty's heart beats, 
Waked by the blast : — but this is not my call. 
Kead Agnes Eve^ by that divine boy, Keats, 
Hardly surpassed in his supreme poetic feats. 



ANGELINE. 



III. 



It was a modern mansion^ with long wings, 
Its shaven lawns enlivened by the light 
Of flowers, and moving shade which the sun flings 
From wind-shook trees. Towards the south the sight 
Eanged over lowland pastures, where a bright 
Irregular little lake broad shadows caught 
From oaks, spared from the forest, left and right, 
As though they had been planted with Art's thought, 
Which easily achieved the park-effects it sought. 



ANGELINE. 



TV. 



The house, within, was roomy, firm, well-lighted, 
With skill proportioned, lofty in the ceiling. 
Bordered by cornices that the eye delighted, 
The chief rooms looking to the south, revealing 
The planner's hygienic thought, and feeling 
For nature's benefactionSo Pictures, few 
But genuine, arraj^ed the walls. Appealing 
To beauty, they the looker's vision drew, 
Holding and teaching him with sound sensations new. 



ANGELINE, 



The day we enter 't is a house of mourning : 
A corpse lay coffined in the drawing-room ; 
Its head had ended here his long sojourning. 
The air was darkened, to compress the gloom 
That men have hung round death, as though a doom 
Were death. To die is to be emancipated. 
A nest of upflown fledgeling is each tomb. 
The man 's not buried there : he is translated 
To fleshless spheres, whence earthly pains are relegated. 



10 ANGELINE, 

VI. 

Besides that for clear light was dimness, the air 
Was further loaded by a silence deep 
That weighed upon the crowd, assembled there 
To look on face that lay now in cold sleep. 
That last sad look might well in tears ensteep 
The looker. Those were features whence had shone 
Good will on all. For this he now would reap 
Joys lasting, peace : we, on earth-joyance prone^ 
Hardly can we believe such heavenly blisses won. 



ANGELINE. 11 



VII. 



The craped, black-robed children, one by one, 
Approached the bier, to kiss that forehead cold. 
Silence broke into sounds of sobbing tone 
From all the daughters, save the one least old ; 
And she was neither heartless, hard, nor bold. 
On her was stampt something empyreal fine, 
The favorite darling of a cherished fold, 
The youngest in a healthy brood of nine. 
The rapt-eyed, contemplative, tender Angeline. 



12 ANGELINE. 



YIII. 



Like beckoning hope beside a still despair. 
Or streak celestial through a threatening cloud. 
Tall Angeline gleamed on that heavy air. 
As she came near, without a tear, she bowed 
Her comely head to where, within its shroud. 
That loved face lay. Her curls caressed — as they 
Had often done — the features, and more loud 
The sisters sobbed : she lifted from the clay 
Her brow, and with both hands upraised, as she would 
pray, 



ANGELINE. 13 



IX. 



Her visionary eyes upturned to heaven, 
With lips apart, as in a whisper slight, 
Or as to help her ears they had been riven, 
Her springy form all clad in purest white, 
Her face in th' ecstasy of spiritual sight, 
With an unearthly look upward she gazed. 
Not at the dark ceiling, but into light, — 
Filling her full of joy and new amaze, — 
That folded father, mother, in celestial blaze. 



14 ANGELINE, 



She seemed a Heaven-commissioned messenger, 
To whom 't is given, into the world unseen, — 
That world that ever needs interpreter, — 
To catch glimpses, resplendent with a sheen 
For earthly vision, — save when that has been 
Purged in spiritual fire, — too dazzling clear. 
Her large eyes shone with gaze sublimely keen, 
Her figure lithe seemed strained to rise more near. 
As though 't was not of earth, and soared above the 
bier. 



ANGELINE. 15 

XI. 

" There, there they are ! " She spoke with bated 

breath. 
Whisper that all could hear. With mingled awe 
And wonder did they hear. ^^ There is no death ! 
I see them, father, mother ! never saw 
Them so distinct. ! read this lifting law : 
They live ! they live ! There, side by side they 

stand ! 
No pain can reach them, and no worm can gnaw. 
What a new joy in father's face, as bland 
He smiles on mother ! There ! they vanish hand in 

hand!" 



16 ANGELINE, 

XII. 

Erect, with arms upy earning, robed in white, 
She shone, amid the mourning gloom around, 
Like splendent Truth, in unacknowledged might, 
Amid the shows and falsehoods that confound 
Man with his own devices, which abound 
Like juggling mists on a projected shore. 
Where fog-bell beats its doleful, saving sound. 
But in that mourning crowd were two or more 
Who felt the virtue of her bright inspiring lore. 



ANGELINE. 17 



XIII. 



The youngest brother shared some of her gift. 
The venerable pastor, through whose beard 
Twinkled his lips as through a snowy rift, 
"Was not astonished, nor was he afeard 
At this eccentric speech, with hands upreared. 
Eeligious was he, one who trusted less 
Himself than God, whose feelings were not seared 
By worldliness, much readier to confess 
His own than others' faults, averse with words to bless. 

2 



18 ANGELINE. 



XIY. 



He had dug deeply in this oreful mine, 
Seeking to solve the mighty mystery ; 
And furthered he had been by Angeline. 
His faith was mastering in humanity : 
He felt man's kinship unto Deity. 
Angeline he had known from babyhood ; 
And on no thought or thing firmer stood he 
Than that upon the stream of her heart's blood 
No lie could float, in her true soul no untruth brood. 



ANGELINE, 19 



xy. 



From history he learnt that chosen minds, 
With varying gifts, are envoys God-empowered 
To loosen floods of thought upon the rinds 
Of custom, grown so sapless that it soured, 
No longer sweetened, human doing, dowered 
To rise, and eagerly towards Heaven aspire. 
Provisionally is man in time embowered, 
But with a soul and faculties afire 
With hopes, imaginations, ever glancing higher. 



20 ANGELINE. 



XVI. 



The pastor was as humble as clear-sighted, 
' Clear-sighted from a genuine humbleness. 
By self -esteeming thought is somewhat blighted 
In spiritual things, in the material less, — 
Nay, not at all. Strong self-regard will press 
A disinterested motion down to where 
Its individuality can caress 
It to conform it with what self can dare. 
Or will deny it worthy of a guardian's care. 



ANGELINE. 21 



XVII. 



The pastor's mind kept open to the truth. 
And new truths are the levers that upswung 
Mankind upon its human track. In youth 
Custom's conventions tyrannous had hung 
Weights on his mental enterprise, and flung 
Him far aside from paths that were his own. 
But when ripe years were come, and truth had sung 
Her spheral tones, and life's illusions flown, 
He had waxed freer and into firmer wisdom grown. 



22 ANGELINE, 



XVIII. 



To him, with this high nature, AngeHne 
Had been, at first a wonder, then a wise 
Instructor, fresh indued with sapience fine ; 
Finer than earthly thought can recognize. 
Until its spiritual sense has taught it prize 
The subtle deeps of its own glorious being, — 
Deeps where 't is plumed with wings of light, to rise 
Towards heights from whence it gains a new far-see- 
ing, 
And apprehends with joy fuller divine decreeing. 



ANGELINE. 23 



XIX. 



When Angeline was aged only four 

The pastor had been summoned to explain 

A startling strange demeanor, that had sore 

Perplexed her parents, would have given pain, 

Had it not been so childish true : insane. 

At first, it almost looked. With her twin-sister — 

Whose body two months in the tomb had lain — 

She seemed to play and talk ; then she would list 

her. 
As though 't was Eve was speaking ; then would archly 

whisper. 



24 ANGELINE. 



XX. 



" "Why dost thou play so long at make-believe, 
Dear Lina ? " said her mother. '' Nay/' she cried, 
With quick surprise, " I play and talk with Eve.'' 

" She is not here," the mother soft replied; 

" I see her not." " Thou seest her not ! " with wide, 
Strange-staring eyes. " There ! mother, she has 

leapt 
Into your very lap, swift from my side : 
'T is Eve herself, alive, whom we have wept : 
An angel now : she did not die, she only slept." 



ANGELINE. 25 



XXI. 



The pastor's wonder deepened into awe. 
Suffer little children to come unto me, 
Of such is the hingdom of Heaven. He saw 
The depth of these great words, th' immensity 
Of meaning in them, which can only be 
Seized by a spiritual grasp ; and this he had 
Through native aspiration, purity. 
She, Angeline, she was an angel glad 
To him, braced with the strongest sanity, not mad. 



26 ANGELINE. 

XXII. 

With trembling tenderness he questioned her. 
It was a blessed vision, to behold 
This aged man, this honored priest, defer 
With reverence to a little girl, and mould 
His thinking by her artless words, and fold 
Into his soul her speech and look, divine 
Eevealings of a blessedness untold, 
The flashing down from Heaven a helpful line, — 
And all this through the four-year gentle Angeline. 



ANGELINE. 27 



XXIII. 



At first, that she could see what he could not 
Was almost vexing to the earnest child. 
But soon, through gifts it was her halcyon lot 
To wield, both he and her dear mother mild 
Had glimpses by her side of th' undefiled 
Lost Eve, with more than mother's joy refound. 
For little one astray the joy is wild 
When 't is brought home ; but here a deeper wound 
Than few weeks' loss is healed, with heavenly balsam 
bound. 



28 ANGELINE. 

XXIV. 

Eve^ lost a cliild of earth, a cliild of Heaven 
Is found. Great good is that, yet not the best. 
By an angehc touch, a sacred leven, 
The mother's being is Hfted, hallowed, blest. 
The finding of her Eve as cherub drest 
Brought Heaven into her heart as ne'er like this, 
Even to her, of virtue's gold possest. 
To see her cherub child ! to touch, to kiss ! 
And thus to know she lives ! — for mother true what 
bliss ! 



ANGELINE. 29 



XXY. 



" Heaven lies about us in our infancy." 
Heaven lies about us in all times and places. 
Never a moment rests th' activity 
Of God, in all the worlds, in all the spaces, 
Evolving out of deepest spiritual bases 
Creation and progression infinite. 
In this evolving, limitless the graces, 
Beauties, while free are moulded mountain, mite. 

And life and love bestowed on behemoth and sprite. 



30 ANGELINE, 

XXVI. 

Where life and love are. Heaven can be, must be. 
Perverted life can darken into mate 
Of Hell, of Hell on earth, Hell we can see 
And feel. Hell 's not a place, it is a state. 
And so is Heaven, which Love doth aye create, 
Great Love, of Life divinest minister, ' 
So puissant he can mould decrees of Fate, 
So noble, pure, his own life is a stir 
Of ceaseless giving, giving aye, to him, to her. 



ANGELINE. 31 



xxyii. 



'T is love divine that kindles love in man ; 

And were not man a spirit, lie could not hold 

This sacred fire, more bright ethereal than 

The light, more potent than the sun, more bold 

Than whirlwind, livelier than stars unrolled 

Through all the spaces of infinitude. 

Lifted by this deep glow, man mounts, — through 

cold 
Obstructions of the flesh with death imbued, — 
To where nor tyranny nor age can e'er intrude. 



32 ANGELINE. 

XXYIII. 

Thence, through high love divine, and love humane, 
The spirit man, unfleshed, revisits earth ; 
The disenthralled, . who hath in prison lain, 
To comfort prisoners, comes to the dear hearth, 
His first loved home, the cradle of his birth. 
In Time the sun maintains the body's eye 
With missives of beneficence : more worth, 
The seeing, feeling soul, shall it not be 
Nourished by spiritual rays out of Eternity ? 



ANGELINE, 



XXIX. 



Only through watchful openmindedness 
Can purposes and will of Mind Supreme 
Be traced, — power and love supreme, no less. 
What feelings, thoughts, imaginations, beam 
Upon us, with a tender, awful gleam. 
At vivid presentation of these words ! 
We feel enfolded in a holy dream ; 
Our consciousness is tuneful with accords 
Which nor the will nor understanding's range affords. 



I 



34 ANGELINE. 



XXX. 



The unseen grown visible ! what exaltation ! 
Our daily air alive with beings reborn ! 
Future life present ! what a revelation ! 
Earth's night illumed by a celestial morn ! 
Spirit triumphant over flesh outworn ! 
Enfranchised spirit back to earth returned, 
To enlighten, gladden, doubting man forlorn. 
The cherubs are no fabled lights unburned : 
Sure th' immortality for which man aye hath yearned. 



ANGELINE. 35 



XXXI. 



'Twixt th' unseen and the seen a child the Hnk ! 
Auroral herald of transcendent day, 
The little Angeline stood on the brink 
Of this immensity, mindless — as May 
Of her fresh, boundless bloom — of the bright way 
She threw wide open to mankind misled, 
Of shallow leaders, sages false, the prey. 
Angeline's leader was an angel bred. 
Wisest of sages, on rich spiritual manna fed. 



36 ANGELINE. 



XXXII. 



Mysterious union ! miracle sublime ! 
Angel and man in one ! body and soul 
Close coupled by copartnership in Time, 
To bear fruit ever ripening, as unroll 
The cycles of Eternity ! A goal 
Aye fleeing, with a brightened sheen, to higher 
And wider spheres, displaying vivid scroll 
Ever more brightly inscribed with holy fire, 
And hearing richer voices from th' angelic choir. 



ANGELINE. 37 

XXXIII. 

Continuous betterment, what an existence ! 
From babyhood to loftiest angelhood 
On road bloom-fragrant through unending distance ! 
Each carrying in his brain the fitting food 
For healthy full fruition of the mood 
Created by each phase of bettered being : 
Interminable progress from one good 
To more refined beatitudes of seeing. 
The soul's unfoldment more and more with God agree- 
ing. 



38 ANGELINE. 

XXXIY. 

This Heaven that has been, is, and is to be, 
In swinging mankind to a higher brink, — 
Whence brighter gUmpses into th' eternity 
Of beautiful Uf e. — In this new lift a link 
In the vast chain of causes, without kink, 
Was little Angeline, the darling pet 
Of a dear earthly home. He who can think, 
Purely and free, of this great fact will get 
Feelings will leave his eyes with grateful joyance wet. 



ANGELINE. 39 



XXXY. 



The lost all found, the dead alive, the breath 
That fills our lungs, with spiritual nurture quick, 
To feed our souls, bright multitudes whom death 
Has freed and brightened, hovering round us, sick 
Imprisoned earthlings, not as round a wick 
Deluded moths, but like th' electric flame 
That circumfuses earth with fire, to prick 
Dull atmospheres. These dear departed aim 
To make us more alive to our celestial claim. 



40 ANGELINE. 

XXXVI. 

And Angeline was a selected tool 
For this beneficence, a spirit-glass 
Through which we earthlings catch (and school 
Ourselves thereby) sight of what comes to pass 
Beyond the tomb, — a sight that in it has 
Kegeneration. Through the affections flash 
Sure warrants of a mighty truth, which was 
Before but half -belief , — broad proofs, that dash 
Doubts to the wind, and the hard skeptic's soul abash. 



ANGELINE. 41 

XXXYII. 

As Angeline blossomed towards womanhood 

The expansion of her heart and intellect 

Made her great gift glisten into a good 

Whose magnitude a child could not detect^ — 

Good which through her clear soul could not come 

flecked 
With dark obtrusions. From her mother's glad- 
ness — 
An earnest gladness, whole, without defect — 
She learnt that what could so transmute such sadness 
Had in it a deep, cheering virtue, and no badness. 



42 ANGELINE. 

XXXVIII. 

And as her brain and faculties unfolded 

She found herself a brightened centre new 

Of weeping circles, for whose hearts were moulded, 

Through her great gift, a quickening solace, true 

As frost-constricted furrow ever drew 

From vernal sunshine. She became a link 

'Twixt earth and Heaven, so strong that she could 

strew 
Balm on the stricken, rescuing from the brink 
Mourners, under their load of love about to sink. 



ANGELINE, 43 



XXXIX. 



When gifted Angeline had touched fifteen 
Her gentle mother passed to higher spheres. 
Clearly as by her tranced eye was seen 
The spiritual body as it surely steers 
Its upward flight towards smiling spirit-peers 
Visibly awaiting her, there was a pang 
That pierced her frame, and one swift flood of tears, 
As on the body, whence no longer clang 
Life's long-loved tune, she gazed, and felt as hostile 
fang 



44 ANGELINE. 

XL. 

Had roughly robbed her. 'T was but for a moment : 
She quickly righted from this blast of grief. 
She rose above that which alone could foment 
Such tears, — thought of the self. This is the thief 
That steals life's jewels. She a quick relief 
Found, thinking of her mother's lifted state, 
Which through her gift she learned ; for now, belief 
Was changed to blazing truth, as at the gate 
Of those blest spheres, where troubles cease and boils 
no hate, 



ANGELINE, 45 



XLI. 



Uplooking from the body natural to 
The body spiritual^ she transfigured saw 
Her precious mother ; and her eyes could go 
From dead to living face, from face which gnaw 
Already quick corruptions, thence with awe 
Delightfully sublime, to face fresh glorified 
With life imperishable, where the deep law 
Of being resplendently may be espied, 
The which nor doubts, nor sophistries, nor thoughts can 
hide, — 



46 ANGELINE, 



XLII. 



The law, the sacred and beneficent. 
That matter is to spirit subordinate. 
Gross matter only by its being blent 
With spirit is enlivened, and its rate 
Of life is measured by its spirit-mate. 
When, through successive marriages with mud. 
Spirit has wrought it to its purest state. 
Then, by divinest spring of growth, the blood 
Flows of humanity, and in its spirit-swollen flood 



ANGELINE, 47 



XLIII. 



The beautiful, majestic, noble frame 
Is shaped, that walks creative on the earth. 
And when this finely kneaded clay the flame 
Of spirit can no longer serve, rebirth 
Uplifts the man above a mortal hearth 
To finer fact on higher planes, where he, 
No longer circumbound by fleshly girth, 
Is launched fresh forth, from earth-conditions free, 
Into new life, upon a shoreless spiritual sea. 



48 ANGELINE. 



XLIV. 



Into new life, out of a seeming death, 
Life soaring into possibilities 
Boundless, which lavish hope illumineth. 
A song from angel-choirs doth hush the cries 
Of anxious, doubting man, and through new ties — 
Tied by great Love with liveliest spiritual hands — 
Turns promises of Faith to Truth, that plies 
The thought through palpable illumined bands. 
Summoned, not by the wave of poets' potent wands, 



ANGELINE, 49 



XLV. 



With their prophetic wise imaginings, 
But by the supervisive, love-born Might 
That fledged the human brain with spirit-wings 
To waft us through death's darkness towards a hght 
So holy pure 't would blast an earthly sight. 
'Twixt the two human worlds, th' unseen and seen, 
Stood Angeline, with heaven-willed power, the night 
That blackens death to dissipate with sheen 
Of God-lit fact, — fact, of man's world the abiding 
Queen. 

4 



50 ANGELINE. 

XLYI. 

She stood as one atiptoe on the earth, 
Updrawn, her face doubly illuminated, 
By her own soul, forefeeling its rebirth, 
And souls already towards their heaven translated^ 
Pouring upon her love-lit looks, dilated 
With spiritual light, with light divine ablow, 
The light by Love supremest consecrated, 
Whose gladdening beams creative ceaseless flow, 
Flooding the Universe with Beauty's sacred glow. 









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